Prism-spread checkpoint
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Physics · Optics
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Wrap-up
Key takeaway
Common misconception
A prism does not add colors to white light. It separates wavelengths that were already present because their refractive indices, speeds, and bend angles differ.
The prism is not making new visible colors. It is separating wavelengths that were already present because different wavelengths can use different refractive indices in the same material.
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Reference
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Open reference and supportStart with n(lambda), then use the thin-prism approximation to turn index differences into bend-angle differences.
Index, speed, and prism spread
Gives one material a wavelength-dependent refractive index while staying anchored at a reference wavelength near green.
Thin-prism deviation
For a thin prism, the total bend for a given color grows with both refractive index and prism angle.
Color spread
Red-violet separation grows when the material is more dispersive or when the prism angle is larger.
Worked examples
Live dispersion checks
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View plans550 nm
1.52
0.02
1. Use the wavelength-dependent index model
2. Evaluate the wavelength factor
3. Calculate the selected refractive index
Current refractive index
Prism-spread checkpoint
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Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Quick test
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Carry color-dependent bending forward
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Push a ray from a higher-index medium toward a lower-index boundary, watch the critical angle emerge, and see the same live diagram hand off from ordinary refraction to full internal reflection.
Trace principal rays through converging and diverging lenses, connect the signed thin-lens equation to the diagram, and watch image distance and magnification respond to the same object setup.
Link discrete emission and absorption lines to allowed energy-level gaps with one compact ladder-and-spectrum bench that keeps transitions, wavelengths, and mode changes tied together.
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Starter track
Step 4 of 5Dispersion / Refractive Index and Color appears later in this track, so it is cleaner to start from the beginning first.
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